Tools for Online Engagement and Communication



This chapter combines two sections on relatively new technologies, blogs and wikis, with a third on digital storytelling, to introduce the possibilities of creating sets of many-to-many relations within and between classes, and to encourage educators to take up blogs, wikis, and digital storytelling in their classrooms as a way of returning to a state of "beginner's mind". These tools are not only powerful in and of themselves, but may have even greater potential when used together. The first section on blogs argues that they may be the best all-round tool for computer-mediated communication (CMC), allowing learners and educators alike to build their online identities in a semi-enclosed space from which they can venture out on their own terms to engage with others. The following section on wikis points to possibilities of using these powerful tools for collaboration, suggesting that in many cases wikis work better when learners and educators already have a solid foundation in blogging. This section outlines work that attempts to merge the functions of blogs and wikis, and highlights issues associated with usability and flow. The third section takes up digital storytelling, to walk educators through the process of planning and creating their own stories, and to prepare them to teach their students how to do the same. The process of assembling various media and pieces of information into a story encourages deep learner engagement, and can be a wonderfully effective way to master curricular content, while helping to encourage development of computer literacy. Blogs, wikis, and digital media are but a narrow selection of the tools for online engagement, but we feel they cast a wide enough net to familiarize readers with some of the options that now exist.


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  1. Africa
  2. British Columbia
  3. CoPs
  4. Commonwealth of Learning
  5. Drupal
  6. E4aDW
  7. East Africa
  8. ICT
  9. India
  10. Innovations in Education
  11. LMSs
  12. PCFs
  13. Pakistan
  14. Web 2.0
  15. Wordpress
  16. access
  17. across the curriculum
  18. archives
  19. assessment
  20. authoring
  21. blended learning
  22. blogging
  23. book project(-s)
  24. bookmarking
  25. case studies
  26. chapter maps
  27. chapters
  28. collaboration
  29. communication
  30. communities of practice
  31. community
  32. contents
  33. contributors
  34. copyright
  35. corporate training
  36. course design
  37. deadlines
  38. decisions
  39. design
  40. digital footprints
  41. disabilities
  42. discussion
  43. discussions
  44. e-portfolios
  45. edits
  46. education
  47. embedding
  48. emerging technologies
  49. engagement
  50. evaluation
  51. feedback
  52. future trends
  53. games
  54. guidelines
  55. identities
  56. identity
  57. implementation
  58. infrastructure
  59. institutions
  60. instructional design
  61. interaction
  62. learning environments
  63. learning management systems
  64. learning objects
  65. learning outcomes
  66. media
  67. meetings
  68. mobile learning
  69. modeling
  70. moodle
  71. motivation
  72. open source
  73. organizational administration
  74. overview
  75. participation
  76. people
  77. processes
  78. product
  79. professional development
  80. quality assurance
  81. read-write web
  82. reflection
  83. second edition
  84. secondary
  85. secondary education
  86. self-expression
  87. social media
  88. social networking
  89. spaces
  90. strategies
  91. students
  92. support
  93. tags
  94. technology management
  95. templates
  96. tertiary education
  97. tools
  98. training
  99. weblogs
  100. wikis


Created: Jun 2, 2009 5:36 am
Last revised by: rickla on: Jun 2, 2009 5:36 am (UTC)
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.